Patient compliance and QoL were tracked respectively by using embedded temperature sensors and SRS-22r questionnaires.
Forty-four patients with CAD-FEM braces and 50 with CAD braces completed the study. Average in-brace correction was 9° MT (8° CAD-FEM, 10° CAD, P?=?0.054) and 12° TL/L (same for both subgroups, P?=?0.91). Out-of-brace 2-year progression from initial deformity was &lt;4° for all 3D measurements. Sixty-six percent of all cases (30 CAD-FEM, 35 CAD) met the ?5° curve progression criterion, 83% (38 CAD-FEM, 43 CAD) stayed &lt;45°, and 6% (5 CAD-FEM, 1 CAD) underwent fusion surgery. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/ars-1323.html 3D correction, compliance, and QoL were not significantly different between both subgroups (P?&gt;?0.05).
After 2 years, patients with braces designed using CAD/CAM with/without FEM had satisfying clinical outcomes (compared to the BrAIST study), 3D corrections, compliance and QoL. A more comprehensive optimization of brace treatment remains to be accomplished.
2.
2.Retrospective cohort study.
Assess trends in sports-related cervical spine trauma using a pediatric inpatient database.
Injuries sustained from sports participation may include cervical spine trauma such as fractures and spinal cord injury (SCI). Large database studies analyzing sports-related cervical trauma in the pediatric population are currently lacking.
The Kid Inpatient Database was queried for patients with external causes of injury secondary to sports-related activities from 2003 to 2012. Patients were further grouped for cervical spine injury (CSI) type, including C1-4 and C5-7 fracture with/without spinal cord injury (SCI), dislocation, and SCI without radiographic abnormality (SCIWORA). Patients were grouped by age into children (4-9), pre-adolescents (Pre, 10-13), and adolescents (14-17). Kruskall-Wallis tests with post-hoc Mann-Whitney U's identified differences in CSI type across age groups and sport type. Logistic regression found predictors of TBI and specific cervical injuries.
A tRA were significant predictors of concurrent TBI across sports. The increased prevalence of CSI with age sheds light on the growing concern for youth sports played at a competitive level, and supports recently updated regulations aimed at decreasing youth athletic injuries.
3.
3.A retrospective data analysis was performed.
The aim of this study is to explore the significant prognostic factors and propose new nomograms to facilitate clinical decision-making.
Chordoma is a rare bone tumor. The clinical features and optimal therapeutic strategies are still uncertain.
Chordoma patients treated in four medical centers of mainland China before January 2015 were included. The predictors for local relapse-free survival (LRFS) and overall survival (OS) were identified by the Lasso regression and Cox proportional hazards regression model. Then the nomograms were developed. Their discrimination, calibration, and accuracy were evaluated by the C-index, calibration curve, and receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC), respectively.
A total of 341 patients were identified and full prognostic variable data were available for 276 patients. A total of 179 patients (64.9%) experienced recurrence and 122 patients (44.2%) died of all causes with a median follow-up time of 57.5 (range, 1-325) months. We identified recurrence-relevant factors of tumor size, tumor location, histology subtype and resection method, and death-relevant factors of tumor size, tumor location, resection method, complication, and postoperative recurrence. The constructed LRFS and OS nomograms showed good calibration and discriminative ability (C index 0.79 and 0.76, respectively). The ROCs suggested decent prediction ability with the 5-year area under curve (AUC) value of 0.868 and 0.786, respectively.
Based on the multicenter case series of chordoma with a relative long follow-up, we proposed two nomograms to predict the prognosis on the basis of recurrence- and death-relevant factors. These findings could be referenced in the clinical decision-making process and provide additional prognostic information for risk stratification.
4.
4.Rat posterolateral lumbar fusion model.
To compare the efficacy of freshly isolated adipose tissue-derived stromal vascular fraction (A-SVF) and bone marrow cells (BMC) cells in achieving spinal fusion in a rat model.
Adipose tissue-derived stromal cells (ASCs) offer advantages as a clinical cell source compared to bone marrow-derived stromal cells (BMSCs), including larger available tissue volumes and reduced donor site morbidity. While pre-clinical studies have shown that ex vivo expanded ASCs can be successfully used in spinal fusion, the use of A-SVF cells better allows for clinical translation.
A-SVF cells were isolated from the inguinal fat pads, while BMC were isolated from the long bones of syngeneic 6-8-week-old Lewis rats and combined with Vitoss (Stryker) bone graft substitute for subsequent transplantation. Posterolateral spinal fusion surgery at L4-L5 was performed on 36 female Lewis rats divided into 3 experimental groups [1] Vitoss bone graft substitute only (VO group); [2] Vitoss + 2.5x10 A-SVF cells/side; and, [3] Vitoss + 2.5x10?BMC/side. Fusion was assessed eight weeks post-surgery via manual palpation, micro-computed tomography (μCT) imaging, and histology.
μCT imaging analyses revealed that fusion volumes and μCT fusion scores in the A-SVF group were significantly higher than in the VO group; however, they were not significantly different between the A-SVF group and the BMC group. The average manual palpation score was highest in the A-SVF group compared with the BMC and VO groups. Fusion masses arising from cell-seeded implants yielded better bone quality than non-seeded bone graft substitute.
In a rat model, A-SVF cells yielded a comparable fusion mass volume and radiographic rate of fusion to BMC when combined with a clinical-grade bone graft substitute. These results suggest the feasibility of using freshly isolated A-SVF cells in spinal fusion procedures.
N/A.
N/A.Byrne, PJ, Moody, JA, Cooper, S-M, Farrell, E, and Kinsella, S. Short-term effects of "composite training" on strength, jump, and sprint performance in hurling players. J Strength Cond Res XX(X) 000-000, 2020-The purpose of this study was to compare the short-term effects of "composite" training to sprint training on strength, jump, and sprint acceleration performance in hurling players. A randomized counterbalanced group design with baseline test, pretest and post-test measures was used. Twenty-five hurling players volunteered to participate and 21 completed the study. Subjects were divided into a "composite" (COMP group, n = 10) or a sprint training (SPRINT group, n = 11) group. Both groups trained twice per week for 7 weeks with the SPRINT group performing 6 repetitions of 20 m sprints and the COMP group completing 6 repetitions (1 repetition = 3 bounce drop jumps [BDJs] with a 20 m sprint after 15 seconds recovery). Significant differences existed pretraining to post-training for the COMP group for BDJ contact time (-7.